14/12/2021
The word “trauma” is often used to refer to an overwhelming event or experience like sexual assault or a life threatening event. But repetitive experiences that cause intense stress and anxiety, can also have a substantial, long-term impact on our quality of life and well-being. Trauma creates stress reactions which become our most comfortable way of operating in the world and over a period of time they become Mol-adaptive and create a high level of arousal—or feeling alert or "on guard".
Our trauma responses take us to an Emergency mode in the body which gives us the capacity to access a lot of energy in a short period of time to maximise the chance of survival. We are required to only stay in the emergency mode for a short period of time or until the immediate threat has passed. The normal healing and recovery process involves the body coming down out of a state of heightened arousal. In other words, the internal alarms turn off, the high levels of energy subside, and the body re-sets itself to a normal state of balance and equilibrium.
This is where it is important for us to reframe our understanding of Trauma. Emotional trauma can result from any type of traumatic experience that causes overwhelming amounts of stress that exceed one's ability to cope and integrate the emotions involved, and can be a result of our early childhood experiences of the world, like neglect, verbal abuse, bullying, manipulation, or parental separation. Emotional trauma is more about the nervous system's inability to regulate stress and integrate emotions than it is about the actual event. Emotional traumas are often more complex than other types of stressors and can often persist far after the acute situation or relationship has ended.
It is possible to heal from emotional and psychological trauma. We know that the brain changes in response to a traumatic experience, our counsellors are trained in forward facing trauma therapy